Madhesh Province
Madhesh Chief Minister Saroj Kumar Yadav resigns
Yadav quits addressing provincial assembly meeting as opposition boycotts session.Ajit Tiwari
Madhesh Province Chief Minister Saroj Kumar Yadav resigned on Wednesday, two days after the Supreme Court ordered him to seek a vote of confidence within 24 hours.
He stepped down during the provincial assembly meeting, saying he saw no prospect of securing the required support. Yadav served 22 days as chief minister.
The Supreme Court on Monday ordered Yadav to seek a vote of confidence within 24 hours, or else instructed the provincial head to begin the process to form a new government under article 168(2) of the constitution. The chief minister received a written order from the court on Tuesday.
On November 10, the province head Sumitra Subedi Bhandari appointed CPN-UML provincial assembly leader Yadav as chief minister as per article 168(3) of the constitution. Article 168(3) stipulates that, in cases where the chief minister cannot be appointed under clause (2), the province head shall appoint the parliamentary party leader of the party with the highest number of members in the assembly as the chief minister.
His early-morning appointment at a hotel in Bardibas had sparked controversy, prompting the federal government to remove Bhandari and recommend Surendra Labh Karna as the new province head. The seven-party opposition alliance held a series of sit-ins and also filed a writ petition challenging the appointment.
As Yadav prepared to table the trust motion, lawmakers from seven opposition parties boycotted the meeting. Only CPN-UML lawmakers were present. Two ministers, Kanchan Bichchha of the Rastriya Prajatantra Party and Bimala Ansari of the Nepal Socialist, were also absent.
“My appointment itself was mandatory,” Yadav said before stepping down. “While in government, we worked only for the people. I asked assembly members for a vote of confidence, but they walked out.”
Then, he announced his resignation, seeing no possibility of garnering a majority in the assembly in his favour.




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